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楼主: joven2009

[原创] 一项震惊的发明,钢铁“闪处理”技术

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签到天数: 324 天

[LV.8]以坛为家I

发表于 2011-7-14 23:00:44 | 显示全部楼层
北京中仪天信科技有限公司
完全有可能,单身肯定会有局限性,只适用于特殊的材料!

签到天数: 66 天

[LV.6]常住居民II

发表于 2011-7-15 11:09:17 | 显示全部楼层
看图样只适合于薄板件,大型工件意义不大!

签到天数: 108 天

[LV.6]常住居民II

发表于 2011-7-15 12:23:14 | 显示全部楼层
太牛了吧   不敢相信,
有点不可思议

该用户从未签到

发表于 2011-7-15 14:57:44 | 显示全部楼层
期待此项技术快点面世,是热处理人的一个希望。

签到天数: 3 天

[LV.2]偶尔看看I

发表于 2011-7-16 14:00:58 | 显示全部楼层
听说过激光快速焊接,这个头次听说

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发表于 2011-7-18 16:06:21 | 显示全部楼层
看过一篇报道中提到”闪处理",没有详细描述。我猜想可能是超高频快速加热快速冷却,表面得到极细的、很薄的组织,而内部是未加热前的组织。未加热的组织有塑性,而塑性不是能减震吗。仅是猜测而已。会者不难,难者不会。世上无难事,只要有心人。

该用户从未签到

发表于 2011-7-18 16:29:00 | 显示全部楼层
看过一篇报道,提到“闪处理”,没有详细描述,我猜想是超高频快速加热,快速冷却,表面得到一层极细的、很薄的而且硬度较高的组织,而内部是未加热前的组织,未加热前的组织可能经过调质处理材料有一定的弹性,能抗震。不可能是普通材料。会者不难.难者不会,世上难事,只要有心人。

签到天数: 5 天

[LV.2]偶尔看看I

发表于 2011-7-22 19:28:38 | 显示全部楼层
这种技术,只能用在较薄的工件上吗

签到天数: 301 天

[LV.8]以坛为家I

发表于 2011-7-23 16:41:24 | 显示全部楼层
一直矛盾的学说。。。。

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发表于 2011-7-25 13:53:51 | 显示全部楼层
感觉像是科幻片呀,x战警精钢狼的艾德曼金属。

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发表于 2011-7-30 15:45:50 | 显示全部楼层
通过磁场还是激光表面?能深入一下吗?

该用户从未签到

发表于 2011-7-30 20:38:48 | 显示全部楼层
真的假的,10S太不可思议了

签到天数: 3 天

[LV.2]偶尔看看I

发表于 2011-8-11 17:27:57 | 显示全部楼层
不过希望是真的并已经规模生产了

签到天数: 1 天

[LV.1]初来乍到

发表于 2011-8-12 15:18:28 | 显示全部楼层
如果这样的话,那么一个新专业又要诞生了

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发表于 2011-8-13 11:28:11 | 显示全部楼层
实验室做出来的东西,实际生产可能又是一回事,

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发表于 2011-8-13 12:11:24 | 显示全部楼层
要是真能有这种技术了,那又将是一次材料学的革命了。有没有详细资料啊。在哪弄到那本杂志?

签到天数: 1 天

[LV.1]初来乍到

发表于 2011-8-16 16:56:20 | 显示全部楼层
快速 加热冷却技术 ,冷却后组织含有马氏体 贝氏体以及碳化物复制的组织成分 异于传统的100%马氏体组织

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发表于 2011-8-30 09:10:59 | 显示全部楼层
幻想总是走在事实的前面,人类前进的脚步离不开伟大的科学幻想。即使今天是条假消息i,也许明天就能变成现实。这是一个美好的发展方向。

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发表于 2011-8-30 09:24:59 | 显示全部楼层
第一次听说“闪处理:真能把钢做硬吗?

签到天数: 24 天

[LV.4]偶尔看看III

发表于 2011-8-30 09:51:08 | 显示全部楼层
本帖最后由 belldou 于 2011-8-30 09:52 编辑

New Way to Make Lighter, Stronger Steel -- In a Flash
ScienceDaily (June 10, 2011) — A Detroit entrepreneur surprised university engineers in Ohio recently, when he invented a heat-treatment that makes steel 7 percent stronger than any steel on record -- in less than 10 seconds.
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In fact, the steel, now trademarked as Flash Bainite, has tested stronger and more shock-absorbing than the most common titanium alloys used by industry.
Now the entrepreneur is working with researchers at Ohio State University to better understand the science behind the new treatment, called flash processing.
What they've discovered may hold the key to making cars and military vehicles lighter, stronger, and more fuel-efficient.
In the current issue of the journal Materials Science and Technology, the inventor and his Ohio State partners describe how rapidly heating and cooling steel sheets changes the microstructure inside the alloy to make it stronger and less brittle.
The basic process of heat-treating steel has changed little in the modern age, and engineer Suresh Babu is one of few researchers worldwide who still study how to tune the properties of steel in detail. He's an associate professor of materials science and engineering at Ohio State, and Director of the National Science Foundation (NSF) Center for Integrative Materials Joining for Energy Applications, headquartered at the university.
"Steel is what we would call a 'mature technology.' We'd like to think we know most everything about it," he said. "If someone invented a way to strengthen the strongest steels even a few percent, that would be a big deal. But 7 percent? That's huge."
Yet, when inventor Gary Cola initially approached him, Babu didn't know what to think.
"The process that Gary described -- it shouldn't have worked," he said. "I didn't believe him. So he took my students and me to Detroit."
Cola showed them his proprietary lab setup at SFP Works, LLC., where rollers carried steel sheets through flames as hot as 1100 degrees Celsius and then into a cooling liquid bath.
Though the typical temperature and length of time for hardening varies by industry, most steels are heat-treated at around 900 degrees Celsius for a few hours. Others are heated at similar temperatures for days.
Cola's entire process took less than 10 seconds.
He claimed that the resulting steel was 7 percent stronger than martensitic advanced high-strength steel. [Martensitic steel is so named because the internal microstructure is entirely composed of a crystal form called martensite.] Cola further claimed that his steel could be drawn -- that is, thinned and lengthened -- 30 percent more than martensitic steels without losing its enhanced strength.
If that were true, then Cola's steel could enable carmakers to build frames that are up to 30 percent thinner and lighter without compromising safety. Or, it could reinforce an armored vehicle without weighing it down.
"We asked for a few samples to test, and it turned out that everything he said was true," said Ohio State graduate student Tapasvi Lolla. "Then it was up to us to understand what was happening."
Cola is a self-taught metallurgist, and he wanted help from Babu and his team to reveal the physics behind the process -- to understand it in detail so that he could find ways to adapt it and even improve it.
He partnered with Ohio State to provide research support for Brian Hanhold, who was an undergraduate student at the time, and Lolla, who subsequently earned his master's degree working out the answer.
Using an electron microscope, they discovered that Cola's process did indeed form martensite microstructure inside the steel. But they also saw another form called bainite microstructure, scattered with carbon-rich compounds called carbides.
In traditional, slow heat treatments, steel's initial microstructure always dissolves into a homogeneous phase called austenite at peak temperature, Babu explained. But as the steel cools rapidly from this high temperature, all of the austenite normally transforms into martensite.
"We think that, because this new process is so fast with rapid heating and cooling, the carbides don't get a chance to dissolve completely within austenite at high temperature, so they remain in the steel and make this unique microstructure containing bainite, martensite and carbides," Babu said.
Lolla pointed out that this unique microstructure boosts ductility -- meaning that the steel can crumple a great deal before breaking -- making it a potential impact-absorber for automotive applications.
Babu, Lolla, Ohio State research scientist Boian Alexandrov, and Cola co-authored the paper with Badri Narayanan, a doctoral student in materials science and engineering.
Now Hanhold is working to carry over his lessons into welding engineering, where he hopes to solve the problem of heat-induced weakening during welding. High-strength steel often weakens just outside the weld joint, where the alloy has been heated and cooled. Hanhold suspects that bringing the speed of Cola's method to welding might minimize the damage to adjacent areas and reduce the weakening.
If he succeeds, his discovery will benefit industrial partners of the NSF Center for Integrative Materials Joining Science for Energy Applications, which formed earlier this year. Ohio State's academic partners on the center include Lehigh University, the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and the Colorado School of Mines.

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